Studio Series: The PLU Percussion and Steel Pan Ensembles Friday, May 1, 2015 at 8pm Lagerquist Concert Hall, Mary Baker Russell Music Center Pacific Lutheran University School of Arts and Communication / Department of Music present Studio Series: The PLU Percussion and Steel Pan Ensembles Dr. Miho Takekawa, Director Friday, May 1, 2015 at 8pm Lagerquist Concert Hall, Mary Baker Russell Music Center Welcome to Lagerquist Concert Hall. Please disable the audible signal on all watches, pagers and cellular phones for the duration of the concert. Use of cameras, recording equipment and all digital devices is not permitted in the concert hall. Program PLU Steel Pan Ensemble Shaker ......................................................................................................................................... Tracy Thornton, edit. Steve Popernack Mambo In Miami ........................................................................................................................... Armando Peraza, arr. Matt Duback Air On The G String ................................................................................................................................ J.S. Bach, arr. Franz Grissom Baja ....................................................................................................................................................... Trinidad Traditional, arr. Shores Jeilymar Brady, Shayla Chaykin, Kaela Shoe, Adam Smith, Christine Smith, Tim Hager, drummer; Obe Quarless, community member PLU Percussion Ensemble Layers ...................................................................................................................................................................................... Alan Keown Suite en Concert pour Flute et Percussion ......................................................................................................................... Andre Jolivet Movement 1, 2, 3 and 4. Dr. Jennifer Rhyne, flute solo Dr. James Brown, guest conductor 2 + 1 For Marimba Duo ........................................................................................................................................................ Ivan Treviño Bucket Band ~ Lewis and Clark .................................................................................................................. Artist Mentoring Program Artist Mentoring Program (4th and 5th grade students), guest performers Elise Rodrigues, instructor Fuego ......................................................................................................................................................................................... Tim Hager Concerto for Marimba and Percussion Ensemble ............................................................................................................. Ney Rosauro Movement 1. Saudacao Movement 4. Despedida Kaela Shoe, marimba solo PLU Percussion Ensemble Alison Burch, Shayla Chaykin, Emilio Gonzalez, Tim Hager, Kelsey Kosin, Kaela Shoe, Eric Sundberg, Bret Skipworth Program Notes A composer of Mambo in Miami, Armando Peraza was long considered one of popular music's top percussionists -- a master of both the conga and bongos. In addition to being a long-standing member of Carlos Santana, Peraza guested on numerous recordings by other popular recording artists. Born in Havana, Cuba, on May 30, 1924, Peraza lost both parents at an early age, and by the age of 12, was living on his own, supporting himself around this time as a vegetable vendor, semi-pro baseball player, boxing trainer, and a loan shark. It wasn't until Peraza was 17 years old that he got his start with music. One day at a baseball park, Peraza overhead local bandleader Alberto Ruiz (a brother of one of Peraza's teammates) say that he was in dire need of a conga player for a performance that night, as part of one of Havana's most popular bands at the time, Conjunto Kubavana. Although Peraza had no musical experience, he was able to convince Ruiz to give him a shot, and after practicing for just several hours that afternoon, pulled off the performance with flying colors. After relocating to the U.S. (first New York City, and then San Francisco), Peraza became an instantly sought-after musician, playing over the years with such renowned artists as Eric Clapton, Herbie Hancock, Eartha Kitt, Wes Montgomery, Peggy Lee, John McLaughlin, and Harvey Mandel, among others. But it was his work with Santana that he was best known for, playing on most of the group's recordings from the early '70s through the late '80s. Artist Mentoring Program is a Washington State nonprofit organization aimed at, 'Educating Tomorrow's Music Students with Tomorrow's Music Teachers" Currently AMP has an afterschool program at Brookdale Elementary school for about 30 second, third, fourth, and fifth grade students. These students participate in activities like Music Theory, Bucket Band, Hand Chime Ensemble, and choir. This summer AMP will hold 3 one-week long summer camps for different levels: beginning, intermediate, and advanced. About Tonight’s Guest Artist and Conductor Jennifer Rhyne serves as Affiliate Artist and Senior Lecturer in Flute at Pacific Lutheran University where she teaches flute and music theory, directs the Sølvvinden Flute Ensemble, and performs with the Camas Woodwind Quintet. Before joining the faculty of PLU, Rhyne taught at Fort Hays State University in Kansas. The North Carolina native holds a Bachelor of Music degree from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music as well as a Bachelor of Arts in Neuroscience from Oberlin College. Her teachers include Kathleen Chastain and Michel Debost at Oberlin, Lorna McGhee at the University of Michigan (MM degree), Carol Wincenc at Stony Brook University (DMA degree), and Pierre-Yves Artaud at the École Normale de Musique in Paris. She has been a prize winner in competitions sponsored by the National Flute Association, the Texas Flute Society, the Albuquerque Flute Association, and the Washington, DC Flute Society and has performed at Carnegie Hall and Madison Square Garden in New York. She is a member of the Tacoma Symphony and has performed in the Northwest with Bellevue Opera, Vashon Opera, Lyric Opera Northwest, the Northwest Bach Festival, on the Second City Chamber Music Series, and at the Icicle Creek Music Center. She has performed in the Northeast with the New Haven Symphony and the Atlantic Philharmonic. She has appeared as a concerto soloist with the PLU Wind Ensemble, the Fort Hays Wind Ensemble, the Stony Brook Orchestra, and the Charlotte Symphony. A dedicated pedagogue, her articles have been published in School Band and Orchestra Magazine and Flute Talk, and she has been a featured lecturer and masterclass clinician at the Kansas Music Educators Convention, the University of Oregon, Western Kentucky University, Cornish College of the Arts, Ohio University, Columbus State University in Georgia, and for the Alaska Flute Studies Center. Her students have won prizes in competitions sponsored by PLU, the Coeur d’Alene Symphony, the Tacoma Philharmonic, the Washington Music Educators Association, and the National Flute Association. Tonight’s Conductor James L. Brown, has appeared with Seattle’s world-renowned community of early music specialists in concerts and operas at Seattle’s Town Hall, St. James Cathedral, Intiman Theatre and the Moore Theatre. At the Moore Theatre, James performed in Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria with Tony award winners Handspring Puppet Company with music direction by Stephen Stubbs and stage direction by internationally celebrated artist William Kentridge. James has appeared as concert soloist at the Aspen Music Festival, Ravinia Festival (Steans Institute) and Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall. He recently sang the tenor solos in Messiah with the Tacoma Symphony and Mozart’s Requiem with Central Washington University. Some recent appearances for the tenor include roles in the Northwest Puppet Center production of Melani/Stradella’s Il Girello, a world premiere of Scott McAllister’s Mercury on the Moon at PLU and in Reno, Nevada with the Pacific Lutheran University Wind Ensemble, and tenor soloist in Riccardo Zohn-Muldoon's (Eastman faculty member) Comala at the 2013 international Cervantino Festival in Guanajuato, Mexico. James has sung with Il Festival dei due Mondi in Spoleto, Italy, New Orleans Opera, New York City Opera, Opera Company of Philadelphia, Pacific MusicWorks, Rogue Opera, Skylight Opera Theatre and Tulsa Opera. He is the Chair of Vocal Studies at Pacific Lutheran University where he directs the PLU Opera and oversees a large voice program. His students have gone on to further studies at such institutions as The Curtis Institute, The Juilliard School, Indiana University, University of Michigan, Oberlin Conservatory, Manhattan School of Music and Yale School of Music. James holds degrees from Loyola University/New Orleans, The Juilliard School and the State University of New York at Stony Brook with additional studies at the Academy of Vocal Arts and Accademia d’Amore. About the Director Miho Takekawa was raised in Tokyo and currently resides in US. She teaches at Pacific Lutheran University, where she heads the percussion studio and directs the school’s percussion and steel pan ensembles. During the 2010-2011 school year she was an interim professor of percussion at the University Of Washington School Of Music, where she currently serves as the Japan Tour Coordinator and Activities Liaison. Miho began piano at age three and took up percussion at thirteen,
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